Hairy Beard Tongue
Other names
Hairy Penstemon
Growth habit
Herbaceous
Perennation
Perennial
Native distribution
Native to the Finger Lakes Region, Eastern North America
Cultivation
A 4-8" tall plant with lavender blue, tubular flowers along the stem.
Light: part shade to full sun.
Moisture and Soil: medium wet to dry, prefers calcareous soils, often found on gorge edges, rock outcrops, and cliff faces; sometimes colonizes disturbed sites.
Propagation
Seed Treatment and Storage: Hairy beardtongue seed should be stored dry and do not require cold stratification. Surface sow as the tiny seeds need light to germinate.
Wildlife value
Hairy beardtongue flowers are visited by a wide variety of long-tongued bees (including honey bees, Apis mellifera), sweat bees (Lasioglossum admirandum), mason wasps (Euodynerus foraminatus), and bee flies (Bombylius atriceps). Several butterflies, including the zabulon skipper (Poanes zabulon), pipevine swallowtail (Battus philenor), giant swallowtail (Papilio cresphontes) and black swallowtail (Papilio polyxenes), visit the flowers to suck nectar.
Location
Mundy Wildflower Garden, Pounder Vegetable Garden and Climate Change Garden, Edwards Lake Cliffs Preserve, South Hill Swamp
Source of plant
Prairie Moon Nursery, The Plantsmen
Description
Plant with rhizome; stems several, erect, 40-80cm, glabrous or villous below, densely minutely glandular-pubescent above. Leaves 5-12cm, lanceolate to oblong, subentire to dentate, acute at apex, rounded or truncate at base. Inflorecence rather lax, densely minutely glandular pubescent; calyx 5-6mm; corolla 2.5cm, dull purple with white lobes, tube pubescent within. Fruit to 9mm.
USDA Hardiness Zone
5
Status
L3|S5|G4